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The 'House of Bernadotte', the current
Royal House of the
Kingdom of Sweden, has reigned since
1818. Between
1818 and
1905 it was also the Royal House of
Norway.
History
Following the
Finnish War in
1809, Sweden suffered the traumatic loss of
Finland, which had constituted the eastern half of the Swedish
realm. The agony and resentment towards
King Gustav IV Adolf precipitated a ''
coup d'état'', and Gustav Adolf's uncle, the childless
Charles XIII, replaced him. This was merely a temporary solution, and in
1810 the Swedish
Riksdag of the Estates elected the Danish
Prince Christian August of Augustenborg as heir to the throne. As Swedish crown prince he took the name Charles August (Karl August); however, he died later that same year.
As
Napoleon I of France was
Emperor of the French, and ruled, directly or indirectly, over much of
Continental Europe through a network of
client kingdoms headed by his brothers (see
Napoleonic Empire), the Swedish parliament saw it practical to elect a king whom Napoleon could accept. On
August 21,
1810, the Riksdag elected
Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte,
Marshal of France, as
heir apparent to the Swedish
throne.
Bernadotte, born in the town of
Pau, in the province of
Béarn,
France, rose to the rank of general during the tumultuous years of the
French Revolution. In
1798 he married
Désirée Clary, thereby becoming the
brother-in-law of
Joseph, Napoleon's elder brother. In
1804 Napoleon promoted him to a Marshal of France, and later granted him the title 'Prince of
Ponte Corvo', a town in southern
Italy.
As the
Crown Prince of Sweden he assumed the name Charles John (''Karl Johan''), acted officially as
regent for the remainder of Charles XIII's reign and secured a forced
personal union between Sweden and Norway in the
1814 Campaign against Norway. Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte reigned as King
Charles XIV of Sweden and
Carl III Johan of Norway from
February 5,
1818 until his death on
March 8,
1844.
The House of Bernadotte reigned in both countries until the
dissolution of the union between Norway and Sweden in 1905.
Prince Carl of Denmark, a grandson of King
Charles XV, was then elected as Norway's new king.
The
coat of arms of the House of Bernadotte combines the coat of arms of the
House of Vasa (''heraldic right'') and the coat of arms of Bernadotte as the Prince of
Ponte Corvo (''heraldic left''). It is visible as an
inescutcheon in the
Greater Coat of Arms of the Realm.
Kings of Sweden
★
1818-
1844 :
Charles XIV John Karl XIV Johan
★
1844-
1859 :
Oscar I
★
1859-
1872 :
Charles XV Karl XV
★
1872-
1907 :
Oscar II
★
1907-
1950 :
Gustaf V
★
1950-
1973 :
Gustaf VI Adolf
★
1973-present :
Carl XVI Gustaf
Kings of Norway
★
1818-
1844 :
Charles III
★
1844-
1859 :
Oscar I
★
1859-
1872 :
Charles IV
★
1872-
1905 :
Oscar II
See also
★
Guadeloupe Fund
★
Bernadotte af Wisborg
★
Folke Bernadotte, diplomat and mediator, assassinated in 1949 while performing duties for the
United Nations in Jerusalem.
★
Swedish Act of Succession
★
Line of succession to the Swedish Throne
★
Bernadotte, Illinois
Sources
★ Jean-Marc Olivier, "Bernadotte Revisited, or The Complexity of a Long Reign (1810-1844)", in Nordic Historical Review, number 2, october 2006, pp. 127-137.
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